My Very First Giveaway!

April 14, 2012 at 8:11 pm (Events, Reviews) (, , , , , , )

I received a copy of Elizabeth George’s Believing the Lie in December 2011 from Dutton Books.  Its a beautiful hard back, released to the public January 2012.  It has been read twice, but is in excellent condition, and although I am a horder at heart and would like to hold onto and cherish every book I’ve ever had the pleasure of reading, I decided I would use this copy to host my first giveaway.  (Get my hands dirty with all this fabulous giveaway excitement, so to speak.)

The conditions of this giveaway are that you (in good faith and on scout’s honor) follow me on twitter, follow my blog, and leave a comment on this post that includes your email address.  If you don’t leave your email address I will have no way of contacting you if you win!

This book is the latest in the Inspector Lynley series, but you don’t have to have read previous books in the series to get into the story, George tells you all you need to know.  It is the first book in the series that I have read, and I plan to read more once I am done with my Agatha Christie Crime Collection marathon.  Believing the Lie follows the investigation of a supposed drowning on a family estate of a clan full of secrets and shocking lies.  George’s character development skills are surprisingly detailed and thorough for this genre, and its a good book for general fiction lovers to read if they want to dip their toes in the mystery section for a few days.  The 608 pages goes fast.

Along with this book, I will ship a small Scentsy surprise in the form of a Scent Circle.  If you don’t know what that is, check out my website here, and fall in love: https://akklemm.scentsy.us/Scentsy.  Winner will be announced and contacted on April 30th.  Let the comments, twittering, and following begin!

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Book Love Art

April 12, 2012 at 6:37 pm (The Whim) (, , , , , , , )

I have always been a lover of books, and of art.  If you’ve followed my blog for very long at all, you’ve seen lots of Bryan Collins pieces floating around.  I’ve even encouraged the purchase of his bookmarks in a previous post. Its why I am completely obsessed with Ophelia’s Quote Mugs. With that in mind, I’m sure you can only imagine my complete and utter joy when I saw this:

This is the photography handiwork of “Boy Wonder” Joel Robison.  Joel  lives in British Columbia Canada and apparently is self taught, playing with his camera and computer to master the self portrait.  I love his stuff.  He has work available on Etsy: http://www.etsy.com/people/boywonder, and I hope everyone who reads this post takes a look at what he has for sale and finds themselves a treat.

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A New Children’s Book by Temara Moore

April 11, 2012 at 10:17 pm (Reviews) (, , , , , , )

Title: “Bloop Bloop!” Goes the Poop

Author: Temara Moore

Illustrations: Brian David Isham

We Dream Publishing – http://www.wedreampublishing.com

Genre: Picture Book, Potty Training

I have to admit, prior to having a toddler of my own, the whole concept of potty training books was something I found ridiculous.  Now, as potty training becomes a reality and my own kiddo is showing more and more interest in the toilet (and she already loves books) its making a little more sense.

So my husband and I were pretty excited to sit down with our first training tool.  Temara Moore sent me a copy of “Bloop Bloop!” Goes the Poop and we immediately sat down to read it together to see if it would be something we’d like to share with Ayla after she woke up from her nap.  And we laughed so hard! In a good way.  Bloop Bloop is fun, but simple, and the rhymes are just down right amusing.  Its a great way to talk to your toddler about using the toilet.  Although its definitely geared toward boys, I think girls would be equally responsive.

We didn’t get very far when trying to read the book to Ayla the first time through.  She was so excited about the pictures and the cat that follows the little boy to the bathroom that she stole the book and spent about ten minutes flipping through the pages herself.  I don’t have the most patient kid when it comes to story time, but I love that she shows an interest in reading on her own.  She loves her books and at nearly 18 months has become a page turning pro.

The second time through was much more successful.  We made it all the way through the story with many “Ooohs” from Ayla and emphatic pointing to illustrations she had now familiarized herself with.  By the end of the book she was telling me “Bloop Bloop! Bloop Bloop!” I would not be surprised if she had some of the rhymes memorized a few months down the road when her annunciation improves.  Thank you, Temara, for our copy of the book.  It will be well loved.

Information regarding a book signing and reading from the author to follow at a later date.  Be sure to follow this blog for the details!

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Weekly Low Down on Kids Books – Easter

April 10, 2012 at 7:10 pm (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , , , , , )

With Easter this past weekend, we spent the week with Betty Bunny.

(Fellow Christians, please don’t harass me about how Easter is not about bunnies, but our Lord Jesus Christ because Easter is actually a celebration of the goddess Oestre and fertility and the spring equinox and all that and we Christians kinda sharked the holiday for our own purposes.  We celebrate Christ’s resurrection separate from Easter in our house.  Pagans and lovers of Mother Earth please don’t harass me about Betty Bunny not having anything to do with celebrating nature, I know, I know.)

Betty Bunny, a character created by Michael Kaplan and illustrated by Stephane Jorisch, is adorable, fun, and an absolute brat.  I have mixed feelings about reading these stories over and over with Ayla.  The same mixed feelings I have about Curious George.  Betty Bunny is an often confused child/bunny who does inappropriate things often in an undisciplined fashion.  Her parents are sweet, and wise and try to show her the right way to handle life’s situations.  The end result always brings on a snicker, because like George the Monkey, she inadvertently does or says something clever, but like George, I never feel like a lesson has truly been learned.  I do recommend that you try them out for yourself, Betty Bunny Loves Chocolate Cake and Betty Bunny Wants Everything were the two we read this week.  We enjoyed both, multiple times, and if I see more titles I’ll definitely check them out at the library.  I don’t believe I would purchase these until Ayla is older and at an age when we can have a proper discussion about Betty Bunny’s actions and what is right and what is wrong.

We also read If Beaver Had a Fever by Helen Kettemen this week.  This was really cute.  My view on this book is majorly biased, since Ayla was super snuggly and curled up in my lap for this one and hugged me the whole time I read it.  We had the windows open, there was a cool breeze blowing into my library and the jasmine out front was blooming and wafting into our nostrils as we read together in the glider.  The whole scenario was perfect and beautiful.  Afterwards she pulled out our Edna St. Vincent Millay collection and had me read a few poems from that, which means she found If Beaver Had a Fever incredibly soothing.  Kettemen’s book is a perfect winding down picture book for an almost 18 month old.

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Coming Soon…

April 7, 2012 at 10:32 pm (Guest Blogger, Reviews) (, , , , , , , )

Follow this blogger on Twitter @carolinaciucci

A Guest Blogger!

A fellow tweet peep suggested a Name of the Rose readathon for this weekend, which I am enjoying immensely!  Goal: complete Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose during Easter Weekend.  Caro is a university student, voracious reader, and fellow blogger of Reading Against The Clock (http://readingagainsttheclock.blogspot.com/).  This is a re-read of The Name of the Rose for me, so I am excited to be able to post a review by someone seeing Eco with fresh eyes!  Caro is posting updates of her reading experience throughout the weekend, so please go check out Reading Against the Clock, but don’t forget to come back here for the Official Review!

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Spring on Some Christie

April 2, 2012 at 12:47 am (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , )

Gone are the cold evenings bundled by the fireside with our hot tea, cozy blankets, and Agatha Christie books.  Now, its Spring in Texas, so our evenings involve a crap ton of humidity, cold sweet tea, and holding whatever Christie novel I’m in the middle of in front of an open window while praying for a breeze.  Still, even though the mood has changed, there’s something so comforting in the consistency of reading through such a large series.  Cold days, warm days, happy days, sad days, it doesn’t matter – I know I will close the night with a few chapters of Hercule Poirot, pompous egg-shaped head and all, coming to the rescue with the truth.

So much of my reading in my life has been seasonal.  I always save Sherlock Holmes for the winter months.  Anne of Green Gables owned my summers as a child.  Some things just move me as stories that should be read at certain times of the year, let the story meld with an existing environment to provide the perfect mood.  I even set my Scentsy warmers to scents that will match!  So you can guess my hesitation sitting down with Hercule Poirot as the weather got warm, now that I’ve snuggled up with him all winter.

Yet, March blessed me with The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, The Big Four, and The Mystery of the Blue Train.  Roger Ackroyd was shocking and wonderful, The Big Four surprisingly huge in its worldwide grandeur, and The Mystery of the Blue Train cozy in its step back into the traditional Poirot pace.  The weather didn’t take away from any of these stories, Christie gets you into the story so efficiently, so effectively, you can’t be distracted by the outside world; afterall, Poirot has a mystery to walk you through, a mystery only he is equipped to solve.  I can’t wait to see what is in store for our household with the titles coming up in April and the rest of the year.

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My Love for Brief Histories

March 20, 2012 at 9:07 pm (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , , , )

and how aliens should stay on the Tardis

Title: A Brief History of Stonehenge: A Complete History and Archeology of the World’s Most Enigmatic Stone Circle

Found image at PatDollard.com

Author: Aubrey Burl

Publisher: Constable & Robinson

Genre: Non-fiction, Archeology

Length: 368 pages

Although I read mostly fiction, nonfiction (history and science mostly) has a special place in my library and heart.  Where I devour stories and riveting tales, I pour over facts and dates.  I underline and disparage intelligent books with my amateur notes in the margins.  My nonfiction books take a beating my fiction titles can’t even dream of… ink splatters from broken fountain pens, pages become stained and wrinkled from spilled coffee and dog-eared corners.  There’s sticky residue from too many post-it notes.  Where my fiction books radiate and breathe the word “treasure,” my nonfiction books tiredly whimper “tool.”

My collection of “A Brief History of…” books are prime examples,Stonehengeby Aubrey Burl being the most recent victim of my hunger for knowledge.

“I’m reading about the history ofStonehenge.” – Me

“That’s silly, no one knows the history ofStonehenge, it’s a mystery.  The aliens did it.” – My sarcastic sister.

Its moments like these when the dichotomy of my reading habits collide the most often.  Where science fiction and fantasy novels are, at times, the highlight of my day, I like these kinds of conjectures to stay in novels.  The concepts of the pyramids being mystical,Stonehengebeing magical, and the world being over-ridden by alien beings from other planets make great stories – awesome Dr. Who episodes – but really annoying documentaries.

That guy with the hair on Ancient Aliens, you know who I’m talking about, the one that shows up in every show about everything with his orange face and tan lines around the eyeballs… he totally cracks me up! But I think he’s a nut and I’d much rather sit and read an archeologist’s account of their findings than risk that guy interrupting my research, telling me (yet again) that the aliens did it.

I love how Diana Gabaldon uses Stonehenge-like structures as her premise for time travel in the Outlander series.  Its brilliant! But don’t try to convince me that little piece of fun is the real deal, the actual way of the world.

Aubrey Burl has delivered exactly what I want out of my nonfiction reading.  It’s a complete and thorough report on every piece of archeological evidence, history, and anthropological speculation (minus the aliens) that has been made over the years. It’s got maps, diagrams, measurements, and so on.  From the Druids, to 1500-1800 literature, to the most recent of science experiments, Burl gives me enough information to feel knowledgeable enough to either putStonehengeaside and call myself learned or have a solid basis at which to do additional research and know where to look.  And its reader friendly, even if my copy has been treated maliciously by ink and coffee.
Buy Stonehenge by Aubrey Burl

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Weekly Low Down on Kids Books 3/20/12

March 20, 2012 at 3:27 pm (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , , )

Unfortunately there’s nothing to report.  We’ve read and read and read this week, but each time I picked up a title from the library it was quickly tossed aside by Miss Ayla.  Nothing resonated with us.  Day after day, she kept bringing me Librarian on the Roof!  Its become the household favorite over night.  Ayla is very young, so even when she is interested in something it doesn’t guarantee we will make it all the way through the story, but she will sit and flip through the pages of Stephen Gilpin’s illustrations over and over again, and come back to it hour after hour.  She loves it.

Even now, as I type this, I had the book in my lap and she had Curious George (which she picked out all on her own,  mind you) on the floor, and she just instituted a trade.

Although, she does have a bit of a love/hate relationship with the dust jacket.  She is fascinated by it, but doesn’t want it attached to her book.  Its a slow painful process teaching a toddler to treat dust jackets with care, but she’s getting the hang of it.

M.G. King and Stephen Gilpin… Well Done!  Ayla and I look forward to owning any books you may write and illustrate in the future!
Read My Official Review of Librarian on the Roof

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Michael Goodell, Interview and Book Signing

March 16, 2012 at 8:24 pm (Events, Interviews, Reviews) (, , , , , , )

I met author Michael Goodell, Author of Zenith Rising, on shelfari.com a few years ago.  I bought his book, eager to read a something published by someone who I actually got to interact with in a book club.  I love getting to know authors along side their work and separate from their work, its fascinating to me, which is why I am a huge fan of reading biographies and memoirs after reading everything the author has written.  I enjoy pairing fiction with nonfiction and finding the beautiful little seams that tie the two together.  So imagine my excitement when, in addition to booking a signing with me, Michael Goodell agreed to do a blog interview as well!

 Describe your book.  What genre do you prefer it to be classified?

Zenith Rising is a work of mainstream fiction with a linear narrative function. It is set in a declining industrialized Midwesetern American city, and describes how a handful of characters respond to the city’s decline, including that of the protagonist, a real estate developer who, on the eve of his greatest triumph, is rudely confronted with the poverty in his city, and decides he must attempt to do something to try to save the city.

I prefer to use the term serious contemporary fiction to describe its genre. In other words, I don’t aspire to write literary fiction, because I think most literary fiction today employs tricks, slight of hand and technical flourishes. It is actually more a matter of showing off, or of trying to impress your creative writing teacher or seminar host. The view today is, bizarrely, “If it reads well, it can’t be literature.”

What were the major influences for you when writing this book and for you as a writer in general?

I was working with a nonprofit housing group, trying to arrest the downward spiral of poverty and despair through restoring housing. It was such a positive experience, meeting a compelling need, that I wanted to get the message out to a wider audience. I thought fiction would be the best way to go. The kind of fiction I like always has a message–not an overt one, but one conveyed through the story. Since the novel was based inDetroit, but I set it in the fictional city ofZenith, where Sinclair Lewis set Babbitt, I suppose you could say he was a major influence at the time. So was Hemingway, along with Paul Bowles and John Fante.

Come Meet Michael Goodell in person!

When and why did you begin writing?

I have always written, because, trite as it may sound, I had to.

What is the first book you remember reading?

I don’t remember the name, but it involved a pair of wooden skis, a hut, and a hill. I was very young.

Do you have a personal favorite out of the characters in your book? Who is it and why?

When I started it was Narrows Burton. By the time I finished it was Seneca Doane III. He started out as a villain, and, honestly, I never expected him to turn into one of the good guys.

 

How did you come across the artist featured on Zenith Rising’s cover?

I met Warren Dreher inSan Francisco. We were both working in the back office of a brokerage firm. He was a painter, I was a writer, and we got an apartment together, along with a third friend who played the saxophone. We used to dream about how our lives were likeParisin the 20’s. There were some nights when we would all be in our rooms working on our respective crafts, and it was beautiful. WhenWarrenpainted the cover painting, I told him I wanted it on the front page of my first novel. I never realized it would take 20 years, but eventually, it made it.

Did you learn anything from writing your book? What was it?

I learned that if your work is real the characters actually take over the story, as I mentioned with Doane above. I had a basic story line in my head, but the characters kept driving the plot. I suppose one thing I learned, then, is to get out of the way of the story, that if you are struggling with the plot it probably means you are trying to force the story somewhere it doesn’t want to go.

In your future ventures in the publishing world, what will you do differently?  Why?

I won’t get published by PublishAmerica. I would rather not self-publish, which is basically what I ended up doing with PublishAmerica, even though they billed themselves as a legitimate publisher. At this late date I may end up having to self-publish though.

Tell me about your next book.  How is it linked to Zenith Rising? When is it coming out?

The new book is called Rebound. It’s more of a straight murder mystery, or what I called a postmodern treatment of the hard-boiled detective novel. It came about as a “what if” response to a news article. I wrote 30 pages and then let it sit for ten years because I didn’t know where to go next. When I dusted it off and reread it, I was amazed that there were arrows pointing the way. So I wrote it. It’s set in Zenith, but involves entirely new characters, though some of the old ones make cameo appearances. Much more of the novel unfolds in the exclusive suburb ofWellingtonLakes, where the rich and powerful kill each other and break all the laws. It was fun to write. The dying city plays as big a role in this one, though not as a theme, merely as background. It will come out when I find a publisher, or decide to do it myself.

 What’s one thing you would want your readers and fans to know about you?

Tough question. I was going to say that I’m honest, especially in relation to writing. I suppose, though, I should say I am passionate about the written word.

Read My Official Review of Zenith Rising

Interview Questions inspired by Ritesh Kala’s Book Reviews Blog

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Weekly Low Down on Kids Books 3/13/12

March 13, 2012 at 6:18 pm (Reviews) (, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , )

This week’s kids books have been greatly divided for me.  Into two categories: the Librarian on the Roof, and NOT the Librarian on the Roof.

Librarian on the Roof is a non-fiction picture book about RoseAleta and the public library she revamped by sitting on its roof for a week during wind, rain, and everything in between.  As a home school mom, this genre of picture book is both my favorite and the hardest to find.  Most non-fiction kids books are factoid books, dinosaurs, bugs, ancient people, counting, abcs, numbers, shapes, and so on.  And those books are great! We have a ton of them.  But finding a picture book that tells a story and then discovering that the story is true is even better.

M.G. King has taken a fascinating tale of courage and determination set right here in modern day Texas and turned it into something amazing.  It also helps that she is one of the sweetest people you could ever meet.  She is kind, friendly, loves talking to people about her book and anything else, and my favorite part – looks right into your eyes while she’s speaking with you.  It’s no wonder that a story about a librarian trying to get the funds to encourage kids to get back to her library would move her.

Librarian on the Roof is hands down a must have for your child.  I was lucky enough to get a signed copy for Ayla at the Deerbrook Mall Barnes & Noble the other day, where King had set up shop for the afternoon.  (Yes, I know, I work for Half Price Books, but the NEW books have to come from somewhere to make it to a USED store.  I even have a membership card there.  Yes, I know, I’m a hopeless addict, please forgive me.  I will make amends with anyone my book addiction has harmed… when I’m older.)

If you’re a book lover, lover of libraries, lover of heartwarming stories, but have no children, you should still go buy the book.  The first time I read it all the way through, kiddo was actually napping and I just couldn’t wait to pop the book open.  I didn’t full on cry, but there were definitely happy tears welling up in the back of my eye balls when RoseAleta finally got to come down off the roof.  The line about being able to buy chairs just the right size for the kiddos actually choked me up for a moment.  Books and people who love books make me absurdly happy.

Buy Librarian on the Roof

2010 was a awhile back and this article I’m about to share is old, but if my post about this book has piqued your interest just a little bit, I think this will seal the deal: https://www.tsl.state.tx.us/ld/librarydevelopments/?p=4337

Now, for the NOT the Librarian on the Roof books we read this week:

Shout! Shout It Out! – Denise Fleming

Probably great for boys, but Ayla just wasn’t interested in yelling with me.

Little Tad Grows Up – Giuliano Ferri

Loved! The art is amazing, and it goes through the lifecycle of a frog.  Pretty cool, and educational.

Hattie Hippo – Christine Loomis

This was easily Ayla’s pick of the week. Great for girls.  I’m not really into gender discrimination (my little girl’s nursery is baby blue, green, and orange), but Ayla loves twirling hippo ballerinas and could care less about the shouting toddlers and rodents, go figure.

Gobble, Gobble – Cathryn Falwell

Beautiful illustrations.  Its nice to read about turkeys that we aren’t planning to eat.

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